Chicago White Sox's Adam Dunn is congratulated by teammates after hitting a two-run home run during the first inning of their baseball game against the Los Angeles Dodgers, Friday, June 15, 2012, in Los Angeles. (AP Photo/Mark J. Terrill)— AP

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Chicago White Sox's Adam Dunn is congratulated by teammates after hitting a two-run home run during the first inning of their baseball game against the Los Angeles Dodgers, Friday, June 15, 2012, in Los Angeles. (AP Photo/Mark J. Terrill)
/ AP

Chicago White Sox's Alex Rios hits a solo home run during the eighth inning of their baseball game against the Los Angeles Dodgers, Friday, June 15, 2012, in Los Angeles. (AP Photo/Mark J. Terrill)— AP

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Chicago White Sox's Alex Rios hits a solo home run during the eighth inning of their baseball game against the Los Angeles Dodgers, Friday, June 15, 2012, in Los Angeles. (AP Photo/Mark J. Terrill)
/ AP

LOS ANGELES 
Chris Sale has spoiled the Chicago White Sox to such an extent that anything short of a dominating victory is a surprise. So this was definitely new for them.

Sale, trying to win his sixth straight start, took an AL-leading 2.05 ERA into his marquee matchup against reigning NL Cy Young Award winner Clayton Kershaw. But Chicago's 23-year-old ace was knocked out in the sixth inning as the Los Angeles Dodgers rallied for five runs en route to a 7-6 victory in the opener of an interleague series between division leaders.

"You feel good with him on the mound and a 5-1 lead in the sixth inning with the way he's been throwing, but tonight he just didn't get it done," catcher A.J. Pierzynski said. "He walked too many guys. He walked Jerry Hairston three times, he walked Dee Gordon twice, and a couple other guys. That just can't happen. We were behind in the count on every guy."

Matt Thornton (2-4) threw a wild pitch in the eighth inning that allowed James Loney to score the winning run.

Sale was charged with five runs, seven hits and a season-high four walks in 5 2-3 innings after allowing no more than three runs in any of his 11 previous major league starts.

"Usually when we've had Sale on the mound, we're in pretty good shape. But they battled and just beat us," said Adam Dunn, who took over the major league home run lead from an ailing Josh Hamilton with a two-run shot in the first inning.

Alex Rios hit his second homer of the game in the top half of the eighth, but the Dodgers went in front again in the bottom half.

Loney started the winning rally with a one-out single. Gordon walked and Elian Herrera grounded into a fielder's choice, putting runners at the corners. Bobby Abreu batted for Ronald Belisario (2-0) and Gordon took off for second as Thornton's first pitch to Abreu bounced past Pierzynski.

"We weren't holding the guy on, so there was no need to rush the pitch," Pierzynski said. "He just made a bad pitch. It happens."

Belisario pitched 1 1-3 innings for the victory and Kenley Jansen worked a perfect ninth for his 11th save in 14 chances.

Ivan De Jesus hit for Kershaw during the Dodgers' big rally and singled home a run to trim Chicago's lead to 5-3 after an RBI double by Juan Uribe. Gordon came up after De Jesus and bunted a line drive that tipped off the glove of first baseman Paul Konerko. But second baseman Gordon Beckham, heading toward first to cover on the botched sacrifice, was right there to catch it.

At that point, manager Robin Ventura replaced Sale with Jesse Crain, who gave up a tying two-run double by Herrera and an RBI single by Juan Rivera that gave the Dodgers their first lead. But Rios erased that advantage with his leadoff homer in the eighth.

Kershaw was charged with five runs - four earned - and eight hits over six innings with seven strikeouts - including leadoff batter Alejandro De Aza his first three times up.

"They have some big-name guys over there," Kershaw said. "The lack of familiarity didn't really bother me too much, but it's definitely different that facing the same teams in the NL West over and over again. That's for sure."

Dunn's fourth career homer against Kershaw came on an 0-2 pitch. The 12-year veteran has connected in each of his last five starts.

"Against a guy like Kershaw, if you can get early runs it's great," Dunn said. "He's obviously one of the best in the game, if not the best, so you try to be aggressive and try to get something you can hit because he's got so many good pitches. I fell behind 0-2, so I was just trying to put the ball in play and ran into one."

Dunn has homered seven times in 74 at-at-bats against lefties, compared to none last season in 94 at-bats.

"He's had it in him," Ventura said. "You're happy for him. I think after everything he went through last year, it's nice for him to be doing this. But it's not surprising because he's got a track record."

The Dodgers also scored in the first when Gordon walked and came all the way around on Herrera's double. Herrera advanced on Pierzynski's sixth passed ball of the season, but was stranded when A.J. Ellis grounded out.

The third inning began a string of three consecutive innings in which the White Sox scored one run. Konerko hit an RBI single, Alexei Ramirez scored on a throwing error by Gordon after he charged Orlando Hudson's infield hit to shortstop, and Rios added his seventh homer to make it 5-2.

NOTES: Sale, who spent his two previous big league seasons as a reliever, batted in a regular-season game for the first time and had two strikeouts along with a sacrifice bunt. ... This is the sixth interleague series between the Dodgers and White Sox, who have shared the Camelback Ranch spring training facility at in Glendale, Ariz., since 2009.